Tuesday, March 31, 2020

Proust Questionnaire: James Stelzer



James Stelzer is a writer and a vocalist who hails from a suburban British town that isn’t quite London. Outsider art fills him with hope (and some other emotions that are weird and deeply confusing). He has recent and upcoming work appearing in Expat Press, Soft Cartel, Misery Tourism, and loads of other cool places. He is also a Prose Reader for Random Sample Review. You should follow him on Twitter at @ABadIdeaMachine


1. What is your idea of perfect happiness?

A life filled with peace, safety, and love (human and animal), punctuated by the regular of artistic creation.



2. What is your greatest fear?

Sudden, intense, inescapable physical pain.

Broken bones, eye-gouging, heart attacks.

That, and dying mediocre.



3. What is the trait you most deplore in yourself?

I hold very, very deep grudges.

If I feel slighted, no matter how justly, I’ll often try to take it to the grave.

It’s not an attractive feature, and it has brought much sorrow to my life.

I used to be an unrepentant contrarian too, but then I grew up.



4. What is the trait you most deplore in others?

The human instinct to form mobs against the ‘other’ of the day.

I hate that shit, and I hate that I’ve allowed myself to be drawn into them a handful of times.



5. Which living person do you most admire?

Patrick Kindlon (Self Defense Family / Drug Church / comics / podcasts / fucking everything)

He is the strangest, most prolifically fun motherfucker around.



6. What is your greatest extravagance?

I will celebrate my birthday for like a full month if given the chance.



7. What is your current state of mind?

Feeling good about how I’ve spent the first few months of 2020. I started a well-paid new job that I was totally unqualified for in January, which seems to be going pretty well. I’ve been reading more than ever, tearing through video games as if my thumbs are soon to fall off forever, and I’m finally getting into a good swing with my writing – after thinking about (but not really doing) it for almost two years. Hopefully the Rona won’t fuck it all up now.



8. What do you consider the most overrated virtue?

I can’t hear the phrase ‘speak truth to power’ without retching because it can be spun by almost anyone to mean almost anything. People whose whole personality revolves around ‘speaking truth to power’ tend to just be wildly unlikable.



9. On what occasion do you lie?

Sometimes when I’m out for dinner I’ll spend a little extra time when I’m done in the bathroom scrolling to take a break from all the social interaction – does that count?



10. What do you most dislike about your appearance?

My bottom teeth are absolutely fucked. I got braces when I was like 13 and for some reason I didn’t wear the retainers and now I have fucked teeth forever. That stereotype about British people having bad teeth? Absolutely spot on. I’d probably rather just dentures at this point to be honest.



11. Which living person do you most despise?

For the last 18 months or so I’ve been very keen to leave the majority of my beef in the past. I have a host of bitter enemies, and clinging on to the dull hatred I had for them didn’t make me happier or more productive, so why bother? If you’re reading this and I despise you, fuck it – consider this an olive branch. I’m sorry.



12. What is the quality you most like in a man?

Men with a proclivity for pushing aside their primitive compulsion for aggression and conflict usually win me over. If we’re at a gathering and I see you making snide remarks or looking at me funny the whole time, we’re not going to get along; if you come over with a spare beer and a smile, we’ll probably be friends for life.



13. What is the quality you most like in a woman?

In my experience, women tend to be more loyal to themselves and the people they love - even when things are tough - than men are. That’s pretty dope.



14. Which words or phrases do you most overuse?

“Lit”



15. What or who is the greatest love of your life?

My girlfriend, Maisie, is fucking great. We’ve been together for almost a year and a half and our lives together just keep getting easier. Having a companion really is lovely. Also, art. I started trying to make music about eight years ago and I’m finally getting pretty good at it. Same with writing – I was in a long period of stasis until around six months ago, where I just couldn’t bring myself to fucking finish anything. I feel like I’ve broken past that now.



16. When and where were you happiest?

I’m always happiest in the sun. I absolutely despise winter, it destroys me physically and mentally. So between April and September I feel like a completely different person. Letting my girlfriend put weird little tattoos in my skin is fun too. So is trying new versions of vegan junk food. Oh, also the dopamine hit I get when an art project I’m working on is going well is dope too.



17. Which talent would you most like to have?

I wish I could play guitar. I’ve tried to pick it up so many times, but I need structure, routine, and a good teacher to learn stuff like that. It’s never too late though. Hopefully when I have some savings I’ll buy another one and commit to some lessons (because every time I try to teach myself I give up after two weeks)



18. If you could change one thing about yourself, what would it be?

I was a very late bloomer. I’m nearly twenty-six and I’ve only just found myself on the right path. I wasted a lot of time getting here that I wish I could get back. I wasted a lot of time on being vaguely angry at everyone I met. I hope I don’t die young.



19. What do you consider your greatest achievement?

My old screamo band played at Miss the Stars Fest in Berlin in 2016, and then played a week-long European tour that summer. A few of those shows were absolutely rammed, a few of the shows were empty, but I booked the whole thing myself, and the pride it generated in me will never leave me. Also, finishing University.



20. If you were to die and come back as a person 
or a thing, what would it be?

I would come back at the child of somebody very rich. I would be reborn again in 1994 (my actual birth year) so that I could re-experience / make the most of the rise of the internet while still missing out on the most catastrophic effects of climate change that future generations are doomed to experience.



21. Where would you most like to live?

A cheap, vibrant Eastern European city. My girlfriend and I went to Krakow and Budapest last year and both were stunning. I went to Linz in 2016 and that was also lovely. So somewhere like that. I like Berlin too, but really it’s probably too expensive at this stage of my life.



22. What is your most treasured possession?

My degree. An unbearably painful family event brought my latent mental illness to the forefront of my life, I had to retake a year, I worked nights at a cinema while I was studying to pay my way, and my Mum got and beat cancer. I spent at least 80% that time period wishing that I could just drop dead. That shit took so much time, money, and mental strain that I still can’t believe I finished it. The process helped me mine out the diamond in me. I am dying to go back for a Master’s when I can.



23. What do you regard as the lowest depth of misery?

I’ve been there multiple times and I’m not going back. I’m leaving that shit in my early twenties. The depth of misery is buried in the earth of the past.



24. What is your favorite occupation?

Recording music with my friends, hanging out with my girlfriend, playing cute little Metroidvanias on my Switch, writing stories and poems that remind me of Futurama.



25. What is your most marked characteristic?

I am both lanky and clumsy – a deadly combination.



26. What do you most value in your friends?

The ability to cut through all of life’s bullshit and just enjoy yourself. Some of my favorite friends are the ones I have next to nothing in common with because we don’t get stuck on any of the petty shit life throws at us – we just have a laugh.



27. Who are your favorite writers?

Philip K. Dick and Kurt Vonnegut - duh! Douglas Coupland too.

In terms of indie literature, I’m still very new to this world. However, I’ve been really enjoying pretty much all the work posted on Misery Tourism since I discovered the site in December. William (the editor) has a great eye for dark shit, and for me the site is thematically perfect – right down to the MS Paint art accompanying every piece. Will wrote a stupid listicle for the site called ‘5 Places I See Every Day (Where I Would Love To Hang Myself)’ with photos and everything, and reading that sold me instantly on the site.


Also, I’ve been really enjoying the work put out by Expat Press recently, and have particularly enjoyed the Plague Readings that they’ve been hosting during the Corona panic. That whole set up is really nice, and everyone who’s participated in them is an excellent writer and an excellent person.



28. Who is your hero of fiction?

I tried to answer this but I can’t. Most of the characters I resonate with aren’t really heroes at all. That’s not a great sign, is it?



29. Which historical figure do you most identify with?

Borat.



30. Who are your heroes in real life?

My grandad. Sadly, he died when I was thirteen, just when I was on the cusp of being able to know him in any real, adult sense of the world. He grew up in Nazi Germany, and was captured as a prisoner of war by the Americans when he was like, 17, before being shipped to England. I have so many questions that he’ll never be able to answer. He was always so good to me though. I love and miss him dearly.



31. What are your favorite names?

Kurt. Amelia. RoboCop.



32. What is it that you most dislike?

Hysteria and purposeful cruelty.



33. What is your greatest regret?

Allowing my hatred of the world to rule my late teens and early twenties. I wish I’d known better. I also wish I’d known to avoid many of the people that my gut told me to be wary of, who later came back to haunt me because I ignored the red flags.



34. How would you like to die?

Peacefully, in my sleep, unbeknownst to me.



35. What is your motto?

Do For Self.

Monday, March 30, 2020

Proust Questionnaire: O.F. Cieri

O.F. Cieri hails from NYC. Her first book, Lord of Thundertown, was published by NineStar Press. You can find her short stories/essays/reviews at such places like Expat Press and Misery Tourism.

1. What is your idea of perfect happiness?


I don't believe perfect happiness doesn't come from one place. Or, alternatively, maybe perfect happiness for me is the joy of experiencing as many perfect moments as possible.



2. What is your greatest fear?

Oblivion



3. What is the trait you most deplore in yourself?

Anxiety



4. What is the trait you most deplore in others?


Inflexibility



5. Which living person do you most admire?

Belle Delphine



6. What is your greatest extravagance?

I have a copy of Volume II of Buffon's Natural Historie from 1735 with the plates intact. It's the rarest piece in my collection.



7. What is your current state of mind?

Today I've been thinking a lot of how Victor Hugo described a siege as having stretches of quiet mundanity, even while shells are actively firing.



8. What do you consider the most overrated virtue?

Iconoclasty



9. On what occasion do you lie?

To deflect



10.What do you most dislike about your appearance?

My cheeks



11. Which living person do you most despise?

This girl I used to work with who's on a fast track to being an unhappy housewife



12. What is the quality you most like in a man?

Dumb as rocks



13. What is the quality you most like in a woman?

I fucking love funny women




14.Which words or phrases do you most overuse?

"Fucks' sake"



15.What or who is the greatest love of your life?

I really love my wife, she got mad at me last night for saying I might have to return to work and while she was crying she shouted "We can't fucking die, we have so much work to do."

There's no irony to speak of here.



16. When and where were you happiest?

I went to a festival in 2018 that drew half of New York, and spent a weekend running around an unfamiliar city with everyone I knew.



17. Which talent would you most like to have?

Acrobats look like they're having so much fun



18. If you could change one thing about yourself, what would it be?

Less anxious



19.What do you consider your greatest achievement?

I've done some cool things in my life, but I don't think of them as my 'greatest achievement'. I wrote a book, but that's just the first one.



20. If you were to die and come back as a person or a thing, what would it be?

I want to be a person and do it again



21.Where would you most like to live?

London? Mexico? New Orleans? California? Philly? I'm happy at home, but I'm curious to try something different.



22. What is your most treasured possession?

A Sikhote-Alin meteorite



23. What do you regard as the lowest depth of misery?

Refusing to change. Humans can survive so much that there comes a point when the sunk cost fallacy becomes a choice.



24. What is your favorite occupation?

Antiques. I'd give anything to sell dead people's furniture.



25. What is your most marked characteristic?

I've been told I'm very loud.



26. What do you most value in your friends?

Aggression



27. Who are your favorite writers?

Victor LaValle, J.G. Ballard, David Wong, William S. Burroughs



28. Who is your hero of fiction?

Boris Pavlovsky from the Goldfinch



29. Which historical figure do you most identify with?

All I can think of is that I once read Gerard Nerval did his best writing while walking.



30. Who are your heroes in real life?

Real hustlers



31.What are your favorite names?

Drag names



32. What is it that you most dislike?

artificial flavors



33. What is your greatest regret?

Not publishing earlier.



34. How would you like to die?

Painlessly, willingly



35. What is your motto?

"Your liberty to swing your fist ends just where my nose begins."

Saturday, March 28, 2020

Proust Questionnaire: D.C. Wojciech




D.C. Wojciech wasn’t supposed to be here today. Shout out to Dante Hicks. When he was just 2 years old, D.C. drowned in a bathtub. After waking up in the ICU sometime later, he made the decision then & there to become a poet, or die trying.

Those who love him, love him. And those who know him, know him. Those who know & love him receive cherries on their proverbial cakes and turmeric in their proverbial tea. Those who do not know or love him are probably sexing with their shoe laces tied too tight.


The Longest Breath is D.C.’s first poetry collection, and is due for release via Anvil Tongue Books, on April 20th, 2020. This collection is aptly subtitled: Lost Notebooks (circa 2005-2015). The poems are gleaned from once lost notebooks from that time period. The manuscript was compiled, edited & completed over the course of the first few months of 2020, while D.C. was lucidly dreaming his way back to Citrus Heights, Sacramento, California, where it all began…


1. What is your idea of perfect happiness?

A plate of pierogies with sautéed onions and horseradish.


2. What is your greatest fear?
Lacking something when it’s needed.


3. What is the trait you most deplore in yourself?

Being hella introverted.


4. What is the trait you most deplore in others?

Ignorance of the self, which is typically projected out onto others.


5. Which living person do you most admire?

My sister.



6. What is your greatest extravagance?

I have a red robe that I wear after showering, brushing my teeth and such. It really makes me feel alive almost like a holy man when I wear it!


7. What is your current state of mind?

Just before opening this, I was thinking how incredibly lucky one has to be, or more precisely how incredibly lucky I have been to be living on this Earth in this realm as a human being. Sometimes it seems as if all the universal forces at work almost conspire to my advantage, to like you know, breathe a single breath, to blink the eyes, or move the legs, or like walk down the street without being hit by a bus, or to be born at all.


8. What do you consider the most overrated virtue?

Faith. Maybe not necessarily overrated, but one that many have gotten twisted, and generally ass-backwards in their approach to it.


9. On what occasion do you lie?

I try my best not to lie to anyone other than whoever is paying.


10. What do you most dislike about your appearance?

My mouth. I contemplate duct taping my mouth shut when going out in public from time to time.


11. Which living person do you most despise?

I don’t necessarily despise one person over another. Everyone is capable of being a decent human being, and everyone is equally capable of being a monster. James Baldwin said we essentially make these choices every moment of every day of our lives. To choose courage, or trust, or love, or honor, or joy, or resilience. Or to choose their opposites. These are not just words, you know?

Sometimes the decision lasts a day, an hour, a simple interaction, other times it lasts a life time, generations even. With this in mind, I suppose I should either despise everyone all at once, or despise no one at all. What do you think?

Also, fuck the judge.


12. What is the quality you most like in a man?

Kindness.


13. What is the quality you most like in a woman?

Sincerity.


14. Which words or phrases do you most overuse?

Alright, All ways, Cheers


15. What or who is the greatest love of your life?

I’ve got this book coming out in April…


16. When and where were you happiest?

Summer ’10, maybe. Vallejo, CA. My apartment at that time had this little patio area and I could sit on that patio and smoke and write poems with a clock radio playing the local jazz station all night and all day. This was also one of the saddest times although I only say this to say that often times great happiness indicates great sorrow as well, there’s no escaping it. Duality. What can we do?


17. Which talent would you most like to have?

I would love to be good at making candles.


18. If you could change one thing about yourself, what would it be?

How nice it would be if I didn’t hear voices. But then again, who else could I be?


19. What do you consider your greatest achievement?

Being. Staying with my work, learning to love it.


20. If you were to die and come back as a person or a thing, what would it be?


An oak tree.


21. Where would you most like to live?


I would like to live in Poland. I read some Paul Bowels while he was living in Morocco, I believe. That sounded like a fine place as well. Or maybe back to Vallejo. On Redwood St. to be exact.


22. What is your most treasured possession?

I have a little wooden owl on my desk that someone was going to make into a kind of piggy bank, but stopped. So, it’s got the coin slot almost there, and now it sits on my desk and watches my work.


23. What do you regard as the lowest depth of misery?


Being habitually unkind towards others. Being habitually unkind towards oneself.


24. What is your favorite occupation?


Listening to trees. Kissing. Watching the sun rise.


25. What is your most marked characteristic?


I make a good sandwich, and can make/throw good snowballs.


26. What do you most value in your friends?

Humor. Acceptance. Love. Care.


27. Who are your favorite writers?

Right now on my desk are copies of Pizarnik’s Extracting the Stone of Madness and Lew Welch’s Ring of Bone. These two are my favorites (for now).


28. Who is your hero of fiction?

Japhy Ryder. Arjuna. Silent Bob.


29. Which historical figure do you most identify with?

The woman who accidentally created the chocolate chip.


30. Who are your heroes in real life?


Anyone who has made a burden lighter, for themselves or another person.


31. What are your favorite names?


My favorite names are the ones Bart Simpson would call Moe to ask if they are around. Hugh Jass…or like Harry T. Esticles stand out but of course there are others. You know what I mean? Did you ever watch The Simpsons?


32. What is it that you most dislike?

Greed. Envy. Fear as a prevalent sequitur in decision making.


33. What is your greatest regret?

I recently killed a houseplant. It was a fern. I don’t know what to do with the bowl thingy it was in. Its stump is just sitting there in the soil now. I regret not caring for it, watering it more than I did.


34. How would you like to die?


Painless, if at all possible. Perhaps in my sleep, without any warning. Otherwise, if there is indeed a comet on its way to Earth, I would like for it to strike me first, while standing beneath the stars on a clear night, reading my poems and sipping turmeric and ginger tea.


35. What is your motto?


When I was living in a halfway house some years ago, I had a friend named Hajj who would remind me to “stand on your square.” I give thanks for that man as often as possible, because he really clued me into some things. Over the years I’ve kind of adopted that and put my own spin on it, and it has become as close to a motto as I’ve gotten these days: “I am the master of my circumference.”

Friday, March 27, 2020

Proust Questionnaire: Ted Prokash



Ted Prokash is the author of four novels, curator of Joyless House Publishing and founding member of Hue Blanc's Joyless Ones.

My first encounter with Ted's work was Napawaupee County Blues, a prison novel unlike any other. As a matter of fact, if you wanna know what a gut-punch with words feels like I dare you to read the chapter titled, "Insane Blaine and the Brand New Shoes".  Prokash writes like a boxer with a focused, incessant jab that drops you to the canvas before you realize it happened.

His upcoming novel, Nikolai Andreyevich, is set to be published by Expat Press and has been described as a "subversive take on the provincial Russian novel." That's yet another book I'm looking forward to.

-FZ-

1. What is your idea of perfect happiness?

Being able to do the work that you love.



2. What is your greatest fear?

That I'll go in for Jesus on my deathbed. Like a coward.


3. What is the trait you most deplore in yourself?

Aversion to conflict.


4. What is the trait you most deplore in others?

Self-satisfaction.


5. Which living person do you most admire?

My 11-year-old son.


6. What is your greatest extravagance?

My website.


7. What is your current state of mind?

Teeming. Productive. Fast and confident. Like a greedy machine. This will change drastically when I have to go back to work.


8. What do you consider the most overrated virtue?

Kindness.


9. On what occasion do you lie?

Weekends, all religious holidays, when talking to a cop.


10. What do you most dislike about your appearance?

My smile.


11. Which living person do you most despise?

Dan Brown.


12. What is the quality you most like in a man?

Sense of humor.


13. What is the quality you most like in a woman?

Sense of humor.


14. Which words or phrases do you most overuse?

I probably start too many sentences with "Suddenly".


15. What or who is the greatest love of your life?

My wife.


16. When and where were you happiest?

Probably in the womb.


17.Which talent would you most like to have?

Perfect pitch.


18. If you could change one thing about yourself, what would it be?

I wish I had decided early on to pursue art exclusively, before my family caught on that they could milk above-poverty-level support out of me.


19. What do you consider your greatest achievement?

Probably fashioning myself into a good songwriter, since I have no natural musical talent.


20. If you were to die and come back as a person or a thing, what would it be?

Easy; dildo to the stars.


21. Where would you most like to live?

NYC is hard to beat.


22. What is your most treasured possession?

My 3/4-size pool table. Either that or my 2004 Subaru Outback.


23. What do you regard as the lowest depth of misery?

Getting so drunk at your company awards banquet that you puke in your mother-in-law's car and miss your daughter's 7th grade basketball game


24. What is your favorite occupation?

"pit boy" (fry cook) at Jumbo's Drive In


25. What is your most marked characteristic?

determination


26. What do you most value in your friends?

humor, intellectual adventurism


27. Who are your favorite writers?

Dostoyevski, Henry Miller, Robert Caro, Gore Vidal. (I'll talk nice about my friends who are writers when they're dead, thank you very much.)


28. Who is your hero of fiction?

Betty & Veronica


29. Which historical figure do you most identify with?

U. S. Grant


30. Who are your heroes in real life?

My wife and kids. Casey. Also Manny for what he's doing with Expat.


31. What are your favorite names?

Bruce, Lance & Julian


32. What is it that you most dislike?

having to work for a living


33. What is your greatest regret?

one colossal breach of trust back in 1996

34. How would you like to die?

In my sleep at a very old age. Either that or hilariously.

35. What is your motto?

Forward

Thursday, March 26, 2020

Proust Questionnaire: Kai Edward Warmoth


The first short story I read by Kai Eward Warmoth was What Once Was & Will Never Happen Again at Expat Press. Sometimes you check out a short story on twitter and you read the first lines and before you know it you finish the story in one sitting. That was my first encounter with Warmoth who hails from Central Indiana. His poetry and short fiction has been published all over the place from Terror House Magazine to Surfaces to Misery Tourism. Warmoth likes to explore the contrast between religion/God and mid-western malaise in very interesting ways.

1. What is your idea of perfect happiness?



Being in control of my time and not being compelled to do anything I don’t 100% want to do.


2. What is your greatest fear?

Corpses. A dead body causes my brain to go on extreme lockdown. I have no idea why but I suspect my grandfather having me watch Romero’s Dawn of the Dead on a bootlegged video tape at age 7 probably has something to do with it.


3. What is the trait you most deplore in yourself?

I’m told I can be a bit of a dick.


4. What is the trait you most deplore in others?

Inability to hold a good conversation for an extended amount of time, inability to unemotionally entertain an idea.


5. Which living person do you most admire?

There are so many real people in my life that deserve this answer but I’m going to be an asshole and say Cody Wilson.


6. What is your greatest extravagance?

Books, mostly, but I’m known to spend money I don’t have on dress clothes and the accessories that follow them.


7. What is your current state of mind?

Patience.

8. What do you consider the most overrated virtue?

I think we’re a society slipping further and further form any sort of virtue, at least any civic ones. But I suppose whatever severely deformed “virtue” is making everyone act like snitches and cops, especially in the art world. I have nothing but contempt for censors, no matter how “pure” their intentions.


9. On what occasion do you lie?

When necessary.

10. What do you most dislike about your appearance?

Nothing. I’m hot.


11. Which living person do you most despise?

Neera Tanden sucks. I don’t really despise many people. I just silently mark who I would and wouldn’t save in a flood or something.


12. What is the quality you most like in a man?

Thick skin.


13. What is the quality you most like in a woman?

I struggle to put this in words but there is a warmth exuded from certain women that has a primal appeal I can only assume is rooted somewhere in our past of being in a uterus. I don’t know. Also, thicker skin.


14. Which words or phrases do you most overuse?

So, I mean, I guess, like, Kiki quit scratching the fucking couch, literally, etc.


15. What or who is the greatest love of your life?

The person I share my bed and home with. The future mother of my children.


16. When and where were you happiest?

Right now.


17. Which talent would you most like to have?

The ability to sing well.


18. If you could change one thing about yourself, what would it be?

I don’t waste my time getting caught in that because it’s leads nowhere fun. But I suppose for the spirit of the question, I’d add an inch or two to my height.


19. What do you consider your greatest achievement?

I have a fairly large discography under my belt from my music days. I still think some of those songs are legitimately great and I’m proud of the work we did. I also have a long poem about the thieves crucified with Christ that I feel is my greatest written work but also am aware that it’s religious nature and archaic form will make it practically un-publishable.


20. If you were to die and come back as a person or a thing, what would it be?

A house cat for a petit-bourgeois white couple that doesn’t want children.


21. Where would you most like to live?

The Midwest will likely get shitty the least quickly, so here.


22. What is your most treasured possession?

My books, my AK, the shoebox full of letters and photos from my life.


23. What do you regard as the lowest depth of misery?

Distance from god.


24. What is your favorite occupation?

The virus-from-somewhere has made it so I get to stay home until May with full pay. So this occupation.


25. What is your most marked characteristic?

Playful combativeness, a large nose, unearned pretentiousness.


26. What do you most value in your friends?

The ability to be comfortably bored together.


27. Who are your favorite writers?

Vladimir Nabokov, Yukio Mishima, Michel Houellebecq, Leo Tolstoy, Karl Ove Knausgaard, Graham Greene, Nic Pizzolatto, Knut Hamsun, Curzio Malaparte, Roberto Bolaño, D.H. Lawrence, V.S. Naipaul, Zakhar Prilepin, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Alexander Pushkin...


28. Who is your hero of fiction?

The whiskey-priest from Greene’s “The Power & the Glory.”


29. Which historical figure do you most identify with?

T.S. Eliot, or maybe the prophet Amos.


30. Who are your heroes in real life?

Individuals who uttered the universal “No.” in the face of history. Malcolm X, Imam Husayn, Christ, Bar Kokhba, Rimbaud,...


31. What are your favorite names?

Ezra, Antigone


32. What is it that you most dislike?

Unnecessary cruelty. The ugliness of self-imposed suffering.


33.What is your greatest regret?

I try not to have any of those.


34. How would you like to die?

Notably. 


35. What is your motto?

All politics outside of loyalty are frivolous.

Tuesday, March 24, 2020

Proust Questionnaire: Elizabeth Victoria Aldrich


Elizabeth Victoria Aldrich--where do I even begin? She's smart, talented, and has a big ol' heart. She's like a character right out of a Godard film. I met Elizabeth on Twitter before I read anything she had ever written. The first story I read was 
92ND STREET SPEEDHEART  published at Expat Press. 
Sometimes you read a short story by someone and it's so good you have to read it twice and then a third time. Her work is punk rock raw like early Ramones or Nirvana's first show with Dave Grohl--there's a chaotic, yet gentle energy in her stories which give me a jolt followed by a melancholy come down. Her more sentimental work reminds me of the early short stories of F. Scott Fitzgerald-- you just feel the love splattered over every sentence.
Expat Press will be releasing Elizabeth's first book, Ruthless Little Things, later this year and that's one of the books I'm looking forward to the most. In addition to being a talented writer, she is also very supportive of other writers, and her eagerness is so contagious that I've bought many newly released books based on her recommendations on Twitter.  

1. What is your idea of perfect happiness?


Wrapping my arm around someone else's, my head near or in their armpit. When I do that and the world disappears.


2. What is your greatest fear?

My manuscript.


3. What is the trait you most deplore in yourself?

Laziness.


4. What is the trait you most deplore in others?

Not being able to refrain from being a malicious asshole. Not being able to tell someone else how they feel.


5. Which living person do you most admire?

Elle Nash is really cool. Michelle Tea. Genie the feral child.


6. What is your greatest extravagance?

I have an $80 pillowcase, $125 eyeshadow palette.. I splurge and get one expensive thing over a bunch of cheap shit every time. Which is weird now that I am poor, because I'll go to the grocery store wearing a thousand dollars worth of leather to use my EBT card.


7. What is your current state of mind?

This question always makes me feel like the Mr. Krabs meme. I am naked under a blanket and listening to a train outside.


8. What do you consider the most overrated virtue?

I don't know, I think it's good people still have any virtues.


9. On what occasion do you lie?

I don't lie unless I'm getting paid to, and I've retired.


10. What do you most dislike about your appearance?

I dislike it when people ask me to fix my skin. I don't care if you get uncomfortable knowing I have lived through hell.


11. Which living person do you most despise?

Tracy Lyn Goldman, or at least the 2018 version of her.


12. What is the quality you most like in a man?

Intensity. Chillness. Liking Bikini Kill.


13. What is the quality you most like in a woman?

Weirdness. Rage. Eloquence.


14. Which words or phrases do you most overuse?

Neon

Like omg!

Fire analogies


15. What or who is the greatest love of your life?
Love. Like that Pulp song.


16.When and where were you happiest?

The last time I cuddled someone, so about ten minutes ago.


17. Which talent would you most like to have?

Necromancy.


18. If you could change one thing about yourself, what would it be?

Bitch, I'm perfect.


19. What do you consider your greatest achievement?

Cocaine Doom with James Krendal-Clark. Also just being alive in general.


20. If you were to die and come back as a person or a thing, what would it be?

A persimmon.


21.Where would you most like to live?

San Francisco or Toronto.


22. What is your most treasured possession?

Signed books. Stolen underwear.


23. What do you regard as the lowest depth of misery?

Life rendering the person you love the most into someone you can't recognize anymore.


24.What is your favorite occupation?
Being a loyal agent. Super villain. Girlfriend. Lone wolf.

It was fun being paid to masturbate.


25. What is your most marked characteristic?

I have no idea. People say I'm ridiculous, but I think people who don't follow their heart are the ridiculous ones.


26. What do you most value in your friends?

Just fucking be yourself.


27. Who are your favorite writers?

Michelle Tea, Laurie Weeks, Andrea Dworkin, Andrea Lambert, Manuel Marrero, James Nulick, Fawzy Zablah, Amber Dawn, Lynn Breedlove, Damien Ark, and this one twitter account I think is actually a bot @FAKEGIRL501.


28. Who is your hero of fiction?

Rose from Rose of No Man's Land.


29. Which historical figure do you most identify with?

Sometimes I feel like Edie Sedgwick in Ciao! Manhattan. Brain damaged and reminiscing and needing help all the time.


30. Who are your heroes in real life?

My dad.


31. What are your favorite names?

Julian. Eris.


32. What is it that you most dislike?

The banal.


33. What is your greatest regret?

I left someone to save my life and escape hell. So, the one regret I do have is also the reason I am still alive.


34. How would you like to die?

Deliriously or cold air clear skies lucid.

Talking to a dead person I miss.


35. What is your motto?

Never settle for anything less than passionate.

Sunday, March 22, 2020

Proust Questionnaire: Manuel Marrero




Manuel Marrero is the glue. A writer and publisher, he's the Black Hole Sun that your current favorite writer on Twitter is collapsing into. He's the founder and Editor-in-Chief of Expat Press, a groundbreaking publisher that follows the great literary tradition of outfits like John Martin's Black Sparrow Press who published Charles Bukowski, and Jack Kahane's legendary Obelisk Press who put out Henry Miller's Tropic of Cancer. Manuel Marrero is the real deal, running a tight ship that's defined by his eclectic tastes. The next Last Exit to Brooklyn will be published by Marrero's Expat Press and what Allen Ginsberg said about that book applies to Expat, for this press will "...explode like a rusty hellish bombshell over America...." I guarantee it.  
Marrero is a triple threat for his fiction is unlike anything you will read--a beautifully strange amalgamation of Philip K. Dick, Thomas Pynchon, and James Joyce--his latest tome, NOT YET, has been called, "...an updated Book of Revelation that reveals more than you may want to see." He's gladly accepted the Joycean challenge and ran with it, which means he's opening every door in the subconscious mind to continue the Sisyphean task of revealing the world to itself. How else do you get to the truth? 

1. What is your idea of perfect happiness?

Not being miserable.



2. What is your greatest fear?

Regretting how I’ve chosen to waste my time. 


3. What is the trait you most deplore in yourself? 

Expectation.



4. What is the trait you most deplore in others?

Malice.



5. Which living person do you most admire?

I admire my grandfather for his continued will to live over 85 years.



6. What is your greatest extravagance?

Getting two pizzas instead of one, and saving one for later.



7. What is your current state of mind?

Sleep-deprived and wired. Thinking about my last seven days of self-quarantine and seeing my family again.



8. What do you consider the most overrated virtue?

Perfectionism. It’s the enemy of velocity.



9. On what occasion do you lie?

When I don’t want to know something, I feign ignorance.



10. What do you most dislike about your appearance?

My skin.



11. Which living person do you most despise?

The man.



12. What is the quality you most like in a man?

Integrity.



13. What is the quality you most like in a woman?

Language.



14. Which words or phrases do you most overuse?

“straight up.”



15. What or who is the greatest love of your life?

My grandma.



16. When and where were you happiest?

The first month of my longest relationship. I was living in New York.



17. Which talent would you most like to have?

Filmmaking.



18. If you could change one thing about yourself, what would it be?

My skin.



19. What do you consider your greatest achievement? 

Starting Expat Press. 


20. If you were to die and come back as a person or a thing, what would it be?

A legend.



21. Where would you most like to live?

Ridgewood, Queens, the best neighborhood in America.



22. What is your most treasured possession?

My time.



23. What do you regard as the lowest depth of misery?

Pandering.



24. What is your favorite occupation?

Chair of the Federal Reserve.



25. What is your most marked characteristic?

I’ve heard I’m stubborn.



26. What do you most value in your friends?

Seeing me clearly and lovingly.



27. Who are your favorite writers?

Thomas Pynchon, James Joyce.



28. Who is your hero of fiction?

Rocky Balboa.



29. Which historical figure do you most identify with?

Bob Dylan or Malcolm X, depending on how self-regarding I want to be.



30. Who are your heroes in real life?

John Cassavetes. I appreciate how he took his mission in art with the biggest sense of levity and gravity, depending on what was called for. Miles Davis, the most eloquent sass who ever lived. He found his tongue whenever he pleased and suffered none lightly.



31. What are your favorite names?

Inez, Aurelio.



32. What is it that you most dislike?

Intellectual dishonesty or tone deafness, cluelessness, the collective galaxy brain, especially when it isn’t even funny.



33. What is your greatest regret?

Being too fucked up to appreciate or even notice significant things until later.



34. How would you like to die?

Suddenly and without incident or time to become cognizant of my encroaching death.



35. What is your motto?

Here today, not long for tomorrow.